Welcome to the blogspot of HEAL, the Hospital Equity & Access Lobby in the Blue Mountains, near Sydney. This page exists to give our community access to information and updates regarding the delivery of services at Blue Mountains District ANZAC Memorial Hospital. Sadly, in recent years our hospital has reduced the range of basic, primary health care services it provides to Mountains residents.
We need to keep our hospital functioning and your support is vital.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

THE Health Department's voluntary redundancy program for public hospital workers is shaping up to be the state's largest purge of nurses, therapists and other health workers, with about 1000 jobs expected to go, unions say.

Despite severe workforce shortages, the department has been calling for massive redundancies to compensate for its $646.6 million budget blowout.

The Sydney West Area Health Service, which includes Nepean, Westmead and Blue Mountains hospitals, is most affected, with more than 500 health workers and 300 nurses wanting redundancy, the Health Services Union and NSW Nurses Association say.

So far, 240 nurses, social workers, dental assistants, psychologists, occupational therapists, and other health workers and support staff have been offered redundancy, according to union figures.

A NSW Nurses Association manager, Susan Pearce, said Sydney's west was losing critical frontline staff. ''We were absolutely shocked … We are very concerned about the people remaining in the system because of the workload pressure, and that workload flows directly into patient safety care,'' she said.

''I've been working in the system for 20 years and I don't recall anything like this.'' An area spokeswoman denied the figures were that high, saying 77 redundancies had been offered so far.

The North Coast Area Health Service was hoping to shed 400 health jobs, according to the general secretary of the NSW Nurses Association, Brett Holmes.

''We can't see how they can get more out of nursing without major cuts to services,'' he said. The area had already lost 100 full-time equivalent nurse positions through piecemeal trimming.The health service said only 20 staff had been made redundant and the 400-jobs target was a result of such ''efficiency measures'' as cutting back on overtime and agency staff.

The cuts come after the Garling inquiry last year called NSW's nurse shortage a looming ''major crisis'' and recognised shortages of therapists.

Jillian Skinner said it was the ''biggest cutback in frontline staff'' she had seen since becoming Opposition health spokeswoman in 1995.

''It's massive,'' she said. ''I've already had it confirmed that some of the people that have accepted redundancies are emergency department nurses at Nepean. That's the hospital with the worst record of [emergency department] performance in the state.''

The Health Department has refused to reveal the total number of staff to be made redundant, saying: ''There is no statewide voluntary redundancy program. ''Area health services would be very unlikely to approve applications from staff working in essential clinical roles.'' It also said there was ''not a statewide shortage of staff''.

The general secretary of the Health Services Union, Michael Williamson, said Greater Western Area Health Service has called for 100 HSU positions to be cut, but had said But the area said only 21 administration staff had taken redundancy.

South Eastern Sydney and Illawarra Area Health Service had targeted 120 HSU positions, 85 per cent of which were taken, Mr Williamson said. Area management said 85 staff over two years had taken redundancy but they were not clinicians.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Video of handover of the HEAL petition to Shadow Health Minister Jillian Skinner at Katoomba Hospital on 5 August 2009. The speakers are Blue Mountains Deputy Mayor Janet Mays, Jillian Skinner and HEAL members and supporters.

Primary Health Care

"There is hardly any health system reform in developed countries in the past five years which has not given PHC higher relative importance…It is clear that PHC continues to be a fundamental component of health policy, and of health systems, in most of the world." (WHO 2003)